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Gurla Mandhata

Gurla Mandhata
Mt Gurla Mandhata and wild Donkeys.jpg
Gurla Mandhata
Highest point
Elevation 7,694 m (25,243 ft) 
Ranked 34th
Prominence 2,788 m (9,147 ft) 
Listing Ultra
Coordinates 30°26′09″N 81°17′45″E / 30.43583°N 81.29583°E / 30.43583; 81.29583Coordinates: 30°26′09″N 81°17′45″E / 30.43583°N 81.29583°E / 30.43583; 81.29583
Geography
Gurla Mandhata is located in Tibet
Gurla Mandhata
Gurla Mandhata
Location in southwestern Tibet
Location Tibet, China
Parent range Nalakankar Himal, Himalaya
Climbing
First ascent 1985 by Cirenuoji, Jiabu, Jin Junxi, K. Matsubayashi, Song Zhiyu, K. Suita, Y. Suita, T. Wada
Easiest route West flank: snow/ice climb

Gurla Mandhata, or Naimona'nyi or Memo Nani(Chinese: 納木那尼峰) is the highest peak of the Nalakankar Himal, a small subrange of the Himalaya. It lies in Burang County of the Ngari Prefecture in the Tibet Autonomous Region of China, near the northwest corner of Nepal. It is the 34th highest peak in the world (using a 500-metre prominence cutoff). It is also notable for being well within the Tibetan Plateau (most peaks of similar height - except notably Shishapangma, the world's 14th highest peak - lie nearer to or outside the edge of the Plateau) and relatively far away from other peaks of height greater than 7500 metres. It sits roughly across Lake Manasarowar from the sacred peak of Mount Kailash. The Tibetan name, Naimona'nyi, is said to come from naimo = "herbal medicine", na = "black", nyi = "heaped-up slabs", giving "the mountain of heaped-up slabs of black herbal medicine."

In 1905 T. G. Longstaff, accompanied by two alpine guides and six porters, made an attempt on Gurla Mandhata. They turned back at around 7,000 m (23,000 ft) after being caught in an avalanche and encountering other difficulties. This was a strong achievement for the time, especially for such a small group; at that time no summit of over 7,000 m had yet been climbed and Longstaff's height represented a world altitude record.

The first ascent of the peak was by a joint Japanese/Chinese team led by Katsutoshi Hirabayashi, via the north side of the peak, in May 1985. Since that time, there have been six additional successful ascents and two failed attempts on the peak.


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Wikipedia

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